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Sunday, March 15, 2015

The Society is actively involved in the Ku-ring-gai Seniors' Festival. The following presentations from Society members will be held in The Gordon Library Meeting Rooms or the Society's Research Room this week. Please note that while these events are free booking is essential.

Introduction to your Family History
Monday 16 March at 10.30am
Old Gordon School Meeting Room 2
Entertaining presentation by Jo Harris on getting
started on your family history.
Bookings essential Phone 9499 4568 10am-2pm or
email khs@khs.org.au.
Morning tea provided

How to Research your House
Tuesday 17 March at 10.30am
KHS Research Centre
Talk by KHS Built Heritage team on basics of how
to research your house’s history. Discussion over
morning tea and a chance for hands on experience.
Bookings essential Phone 9499 4568 10am-2pm or
email khs@khs.org.au

WWI Memories and Mementos
Wednesday 18 March, at 10.30am
Old Gordon School Room 2
As we celebrate the ANZAC centenary, share your
family WWI stories and memories with our WWI
Research Team. Bring photos and mementos of
WWI. Learn how to find out more about your
family member’s involvement in WWI. Bookings
essential Phone 9499 4568 10am-2pm or email
khs@khs.org.au Morning tea provided

What are these things called Blogs?
Join one of Australia’s foremost bloggers, Geniaus
(aka Jill Ball) to learn of the wonderful and varied
things to be found in blogs. Learn how to use blogs
to keep a journal, preserve your stories, record your
travels, share your recipes. Examples of different
types of blogs will be provided.Thursday 19 March at 1.30pm
Old Gordon School Meeting Room 1
Bookings phone 94994568 or email khs@khs.org.au
Afternoon tea provided

Early Ku-ring-gai
Friday 20 March, 10.30am
Old Gordon School Meeting Room 1
KHS Vice-President, Jo Harris will take you on a
journey through the development of Ku-ring-gai,
from Captain Arthur Phillip’s overland expedition
to the timber-getters, orchardists, first school and church at Gordon, and agitation by residents
resulting in the north shore railway line.
Bookings essential Please phone 9499 4568 or
email khs@khs.org.au Morning tea provided.

Friday, March 13, 2015

The Society was notified of this event in the Federation of Australian Historical Societies e-Bulletin No. 134 - 8 March 2015

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SATURDAY, 18 APRIL 2015, SYDNEYThe Inaugural Dr Jim Kerr Memorial Addresson the International Day for Monuments & Sites1.15pm for 1.45pm start, followed by the optional tour at 4pm

An Australia ICOMOS event in association with the Sydney Opera House; the Heritage Division NSW Office of Environment and Heritage; and the National Trust of Australia (NSW).

Jim Kerr’s gift was to articulate with great clarity how the care of special places might be achieved. He disseminated his ideas widely for discussion and tested them on real, culturally vital sites around Australia. He would then again update his policy document, the Conservation Plan. The annual Jim Kerr Memorial address pays respect to his legacy by perpetuating open enquiry into the understanding of place and the constant review of progress in conservation planning practice.

Tuesday 17 March 2015, 12:30pm – 1:30pmVenue: Mitchell Theatre, SMSA (Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts), 280 Pitt Street, Sydney NSW 2000Submarines have loomed ever larger in the news of late, from the visit of Japanese Prime Minister Abe in 2014, with subsequent media reports on the possibility of Australia buying Japanese Soryu Class submarines, to the recent use of submarines as bargaining chips in shoring up political support for the Prime Minister.

The Future Submarine will be one of the biggest and most expensive infrastructure projects in Australian history, as ambitious as the Snowy Mountain Hydro-electric Scheme or the National Broadband Network.

And if Australians felt blindsided in 2014 when the federal government announced its purchase of an additional 58 F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jets for $12 billion, they’ll really want to sit down with a strong cup of tea to contemplate the cost of our future submarine fleet.

The new vessels will need to enter service by the early-to-mid 2030s in order to replace the ageing Collins Class submarines.

Join writer and policy analyst Claire Corbett, who covers naval and strategic defence issues for the national magazine The Monthly, to discuss our Future Submarine and discover why the decision is so complex and difficult.